I want to schedule a job to be launched every 15 minutes within 2:30 ~ 4:30, I had to use multiple lines to achieve that. But as a matter of fact, the job was not evenly scheduled during the period. Is there any way to gracefully solve it?
H(0-29)/15 4 * * *
H(30-59)/15 2 * * *
H/15 3 * * *
It seems jenkins can spread evenly the job in each of above period, but it can't do it making period as a whole period.
I want to schedule a build every day at a particular time say 4pm.
And hence I have set up the build periodically to :
H 16 * * *
I am noticing that the build either doesn't get triggered at the scheduled time or else gets triggered at a random time , ( 4 hours prior to scheduled build)
I want to understand how scheduling works for the build to understand why is it not triggering build at the intended time.
I suspected that master node would be in a timezone other than what I want but that is also not the case.
Inspite of setting timezone as below:
TZ=America/Los_Angeles
H 16 * * *
I want to set my DAG to run one day at a time.
How can I achieve this?
I tried "depends on past=True", but it only makes sure each task is run subsequently. What I want is that, if I'm backfilling from day X, all tasks of day X are run before the DAG for day X+1 can start and so on.
You can use max_active_runs to control the number of active dag runs.
Limiting it to one should satisfy your use case.
dag = airflow.DAG(
'customer_staging',
schedule_interval="#daily",
dagrun_timeout=timedelta(minutes=60),
template_searchpath=tmpl_search_path,
default_args=args,
max_active_runs=1)
Check out this page.
You can set up your schedule_interval with the following: 0 0 * * *.
If you have set up catchup_by_default = True with start_date several days ago, airflow will backfill all your previous tasks first then run the schedule based on schedule_interval.
I want to execute a python script once in a day at say 1 PM.
I tried using * 13 * * * but the script did not execute automatically.
You should use the Build periodically option as below:
H(0-6) ****
you should use the hours option **** means every day in every week of every month of every year during 0-6 hours this worked perfectly for me
Answer :
H(0-10) 13 * * *
How do you know it didn't execute? Normally it will send a mail to the user account authorised to run the script - look under /var/mail/$ACCOUNT and you should see if it ran, but failed...
I hope you are trying to run the build at 1 PM every day. You can use the below in this case and try.
0 13 1-31 1-12 0-7
I added a new job in Jenkins, which I want to schedule periodically.
From Configure job, I am checking the "Build Periodically" checkbox and in the Schedule text field added the expression:
15 13 * * *
But it does not run at the scheduled time.
Is it the correct procedure to schedule a job?
The job should run at 4:20 AM, but it is not running.
By setting the schedule period to 15 13 * * * you tell Jenkins to schedule the build every day of every month of every year at the 15th minute of the 13th hour of the day.
Jenkins used a cron expression, and the different fields are:
MINUTES Minutes in one hour (0-59)
HOURS Hours in one day (0-23)
DAYMONTH Day in a month (1-31)
MONTH Month in a year (1-12)
DAYWEEK Day of the week (0-7) where 0 and 7 are sunday
If you want to schedule your build every 5 minutes, this will do the job : */5 * * * *
If you want to schedule your build every day at 8h00, this will do the job : 0 8 * * *
For the past few versions (2014), Jenkins have a new parameter, H (extract from the Jenkins code documentation):
To allow periodically scheduled tasks to produce even load on the system, the symbol H (for “hash”) should be used wherever possible.
For example, using 0 0 * * * for a dozen daily jobs will cause a large spike at midnight. In contrast, using H H * * * would still execute each job once a day, but not all at the same time, better using limited resources.
Note also that:
The H symbol can be thought of as a random value over a range, but it actually is a hash of the job name, not a random function, so that the value remains stable for any given project.
More example of using 'H'
The format is as follows:
MINUTE (0-59), HOUR (0-23), DAY (1-31), MONTH (1-12), DAY OF THE WEEK (0-6)
The letter H, representing the word Hash can be inserted instead of any of the values. It will calculate the parameter based on the hash code of you project name.
This is so that if you are building several projects on your build machine at the same time, let’s say midnight each day, they do not all start their build execution at the same time. Each project starts its execution at a different minute depending on its hash code.
You can also specify the value to be between numbers, i.e. H(0,30) will return the hash code of the project where the possible hashes are 0-30.
Examples:
Start build daily at 08:30 in the morning, Monday - Friday: 30 08 * * 1-5
Weekday daily build twice a day, at lunchtime 12:00 and midnight 00:00, Sunday to Thursday: 00 0,12 * * 0-4
Start build daily in the late afternoon between 4:00 p.m. - 4:59 p.m. or 16:00 -16:59 depending on the projects hash: H 16 * * 1-5
Start build at midnight: #midnight or start build at midnight, every Saturday: 59 23 * * 6
Every first of every month between 2:00 a.m. - 02:30 a.m.: H(0,30) 02 01 * *
Jenkins lets you set up multiple times, separated by line breaks.
If you need it to build daily at 7 am, along with every Sunday at 4 pm, the below works well.
H 7 * * *
H 16 * * 0
*/5 * * * * means every 5 minutes
5 * * * * means the 5th minute of every hour
The steps for scheduling jobs in Jenkins:
click on "Configure" of the job requirement
scroll down to "Build Triggers" - subtitle
Click on the checkBox of Build periodically
Add time schedule in the Schedule field, for example: #midnight
Note: under the schedule field, can see the last and the next date-time run.
Jenkins also supports predefined aliases to schedule build:
#hourly, #daily, #weekly, #monthly, #midnight
#hourly --> Build every hour at the beginning of the hour --> 0 * * * *
#daily, #midnight --> Build every day at midnight --> 0 0 * * *
#weekly --> Build every week at midnight on Sunday morning --> 0 0 * * 0
#monthly --> Build every month at midnight of the first day of the month --> 0 0 1 * *
Another example, How to run only on a specific day of the week:
# Every Sunday at 19:00
0 19 * * 0
The number at the end is the day of the week according to the following list:
0 = Sunday
1 = Monday
2 = Tuesday
3 = Wednesday
4 = Thursday
5 = Friday
6 = Saturday
If you are interested in how many days a week you can add a comma like this:
# Monday, Wednesday and Friday:
0 19 * * 1,3,5
Jenkins Job Scheduling Syntax
First, let’s look at the Jenkins job scheduling configuration. It looks a lot like Linux’s cron syntax, but you don’t have to be familiar with command line Linux to figure it out.
A scheduling entry consists of five whitespace-separated fields. You can schedule a job for more than one time by adding more than one entry.
Screenshot
Each field can contain an exact value or use a set of special expressions:
The familiar asterisk * indicates all valid values. So, a job that runs every day has a * in the third field.
A dash separates ranges of values. For example, a job that runs every hour from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. would have 9-17 in the second field.
Intervals are specified with a slash /. A job that runs every 15 minutes has H/15 in the first field. Note that the H in the first field has a special meaning. If you wanted a job to run every 15 minutes, you could configure it as 0/15, which would make it run at the start of every hour. However, if you configure too many jobs this way, you can overload your Jenkins controller. Ultimately, the H tells Jenkins to pick a minute based on a hash of the job name.
Finally, you can specify multiple values with a comma. So, a job that runs Monday, Wednesday, and Friday would have 1,3,5 in the fifth field.
Jenkins provides a few examples in their help section for scheduling.
Every fifteen minutes (perhaps at :07, :22, :37, :52):
H/15 * * * *
Every ten minutes in the first half of every hour (three times,
perhaps at :04, :14, :24):
H(0-29)/10 * * * *
Once every two hours at 45 minutes past the hour starting at 9:45 AM
and finishing at 3:45 PM every weekday:
45 9-16/2 * * 1-5
Once in every two hour slot between 8 AM and 4 PM every weekday
(perhaps at 9:38 AM, 11:38 AM, 1:38 PM, 3:38 PM):
H H(8-15)/2 * * 1-5
Once a day on the 1st and 15th of every month except December:
H H 1,15 1-11 *
Jenkins also has a set of aliases that makes using common intervals easier.
Screenshot of table
To schedule a cron job every 5 minutes, you need to define the cron settings like this:
*/5 * * * *
Try this.
20 4 * * *
Check the below Screenshot
Referred URL - https://www.lenar.io/jenkins-schedule-build-periodically/
Try using 0 8 * * *. It should work
Jenkins uses Cron format on scheduling.
You can refer this link for more detailhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron.
One more thing, Jenkins provide us a very useful preview. Please take a look on the screenshot.
I hope this help. Thanks